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Proj Inspire 2026 Complete Motzei Shabbos Keynote
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Project Inspire's mission is to empower committed Jews to take responsibility to create a vibrant and unified Jewish people by sharing the beauty and wisdom of our common heritage with fellow Jews. For more information visit www.ProjectInspire.com. SUBSCRIBE to get the latest from Project Inspire: http://bit.ly/1Ntl9rs Project Inspire on INSTAGRAM: http://bit.ly/1TiTAYX Like Project Inspire on FACEBOOK: http://on.fb.me/1QmzWIT Follow Project Inspire on TWITTER: http://bit.ly/1S3CYFN
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Okay, ladies and gentlemen, sh this room
is this room is full to capacity.
It's warm and cozy in here with threats
of a winter storm.
But nevertheless, ladies and gentlemen,
we came tonight to be inspired together.
So, I ask everyone to please sh let's be
as quiet as we can. And ladies and
gentlemen, I welcome you to the
Matsashabis Gala Mala of the 2026
Project Inspired Convention.
17 years
17 years of partnership, of vision, of
people who chose to take responsibility.
What began as inspiration became
commitment. What began as a vision is
becoming a movement.
Year after year we gathered, we
listened. We learned what happens when
people step forward and take aas not
only for themselves but for Kalisra. And
we discovered something deeper. When we
inspire another Jew, something happens
within us. Our own yiddishkite becomes
stronger. Our own clarity becomes
sharper. Our own sense of purpose
becomes real. Because this is not only
what we give. It is about who we become.
Tonight is not just about reflecting on
what has been accomplished. Tonight is
about what comes next.
Not what someone else will do, but what
we will do. What role will we take? How
will we step forward? How will we help
shape the future of our people? And in
doing so, shape our future as well.
This evening is an opportunity, an
opportunity to grow, an opportunity to
step forward, an opportunity to act. So
experience this moment. Let it challenge
you. Let it move you. and let it push
you to take the next step because by the
end of this evening each of us will know
we are not here by accident. We are here
because we are needed. Welcome to the
Gala Malava Mala keynote session of the
project inspire convention. This is our
moment. This is our responsibility. Here
we go.
Ladies and gentlemen,
welcome
to the Malava Malika gala presentation
of the project inspired convention. What
a spectacular shabas we spent together.
Was that not amazing?
>> With all the challenges, everybody here
kept a smile and we were totally blown
away
by the amazing presenters and speakers.
I want to make a short announcement
before this evening's program that
tonight's program from right now is 92
minutes. That is an hour and a half. And
I encourage all of you as in previous
years to not leave early. Stay focused.
You never know what you'll see at a
Project Inspire convention. Ladies and
gentlemen, over Shabas, we were
completely blown away by Raosa
Weinberger
who spent Shabas with us. his words of
and inspiration, his
sh we connected with his soul and he
connected us to all of a deep sense of
love that we all felt throughout Chabas.
Of course, Rever Fry Melo Shapiro who
was already I believe back in Miami
Beach back with his community already.
We learned how to teach. Was that not an
unbelievable session? Congratulations to
everybody who stuck with and fooy on the
people who fled for the door.
We went through a check-in process and
yes, of course, the orange vest. How
could we forget
2 am 2 am we had the pow-wow with Rabbi
Feltime and Rab Aaron Cutler and of
course Rabbi Nissle somewhere in
between.
We heard from Yi Herzog how calling
people before Shabas has transformed
lives and how encouraging people to keep
the shab
has actually helped them keep Shabas. We
heard from Yih the women's session
during Shalis which was absolutely
beautiful. It would still be going if
Havdal didn't get in its way. We heard
from Ti Barracks and of course Ya gave
us a little taste of some more of what
we're going to hear tonight.
But most importantly,
but most importantly, so many of you
have already approached us about how you
can get involved and what we could
provide for you as an opportunity to get
you involved.
We're going to be speaking about that a
lot more in the program. because there
is something for everyone here tonight.
Ladies and gentlemen, without further
ado to kick off this evening's program,
it is my honor and pleasure to
reintroduce to you the the founding
director of Project Inspire, my dear
friend and colleague, Rabbi Kaim Samson.
A good v everybody
did you have a good shabas?
We at project expire certainly did but a
lot of people asked us over the sha so
why did you change the venue really so I
have been telling people the truth that
as you know we've been work been doing
our our convention in Connecticut for
many years and it was really getting
very easy for Yasi to do it he did it
like the back of his hand I sometimes
even caught him sleeping in the middle
of the day when things were going on and
it was so easy and we know Sara Agra. So
we decided to change the venue. We all
met as a team. We worked out what days
they're going to be sleep outside on
Arab Shabas. We gave Yossi the job to to
take the cars and we felt you know what
that will give him a little bit of of a
harder work. Lefung Sara Agra will get
more scar. So Yossi thank you for what
you did on Arab Shabas. Didn't Yossi do
a great job? And not just Yasi but the
whole team.
the whole team and joking aside I just
want to thank the whole team for what
they've done because it is quite
incredible from all my experience all
together in life of seeing a team like
this it everyone plays their role in the
most unique and special way coming
together but actors to to get the seat
desire that we have and I just like to
mention the following names Lauren Levit
Yoni Zakatinsky Rabbi Modai Trop
Yakov Giner Kayla Spiro, Civia Avadia,
Toba Cohen, Daniela H, and Kaya Aza. And
I'm sorry if I left people out. I
appreciate tremendous volunteers and I
thank them. And I thank all of you for
being here and being our great partners.
We spoke a little bit on last night
about Misha Adima
that when Ada comes in, we increase in
sim. And we gave a little bit of a new
twist to it that perhaps the idea is not
just our own simka, but how can we have
real true simra when our brothers and
sisters 90% of them don't and perhaps
the marima
is that we have to get our brothers
involved to taste the joy and the
pleasure of Yiddish kite and a
relationship with Hashem.
I shared a story with you my dear
Rebi Ravnak Weinberg yesterday and I
want to share another one with you now
which I heard from Yehuda Weineberg his
son
that his nephew Yeuda's nephew a
grandson of Noah met with him
a a few weeks before he passed away
and his nephew came to him and Ravnak
looked at him in the
And he said to him, "I want you to dven
for me for two things.
I want you to dven for me for two
things.
Firstly, I want you to do that I,
Ravoineberg,
can understand the meaning of
existence." That's quite a prayer. He's
asking his grandson to And secondly, I'd
like you to do for me that I have three
more years of life so I can change the
whole world. In three years, you can
change the whole world. Please do for me
that I have three more years of life.
And that was Al Rebi. That was Alrebi
that he was committed to the idea that
we have to bring back all of Israel. And
he believed with a passion that you
could do that you could do that. And why
why did he have that passion? Because he
believed he understood
that every human being is made.
The whole world was created for me and I
can change the whole world. I have
infinite potential. As it says in
what is man that you remember him
and the son of man that you pay
attention to him
and you made him a little bit less than
God himself. This is the power the
potential that we have. If we want, we
can change worlds for the better and god
forbid for the worse. But we we're a
little bit less than the almighty
himself. That's our potential. And he
understood that the Almighty loves us.
He had a bet on that there's there's an
infinite being who loves us. And with
Hashem on your side, what can't you do?
You can do anything. If Hashem was on
your side, can't you bring back the
whole of the Jewish people? Surely you
can. And he had a will of iron, a
yushmayim,
and an and a clarity that Hashem wants
all of our children back. He once told
me that his mission statement for life
is bring which he asked him, "Do you
have a mission statement?" And he said,
"Yes." I said, "What is it?" He said,
"Bring back the Jewish people, the
Jewish people, all of them now. No
excuses." That was his mission
statement. And that's what we had as tal
and we understood. But I just want to
say to you and I I I think that bez
hashem over the shabas perhaps we got a
little bit of that clarity that we can
and that we must bring back our brothers
and sisters. And I'm not going to talk
about that anymore because I think we
got that clarity. The Noah understood
that one man could change the whole
world. But it used to speak about give
me 10 men and we'll change the world.
Some people say give me 10 men means
give me five women. Five women is 10 men
is right. So 10 men or give me five
women, you know. But he used to say give
me 10 men and I'll change the world.
But I don't know, you know, who is a man
and who's not a man, who's really on
that level to be considered a man. But
what I do know is we have canine har 500
people in the room here. And I do know
that if we work together with a hashem
will look down and see our efforts. And
I believe that this is the
basim if all of us take the beautiful
shabas everything that we learned and we
say, you know, we're going to be both in
our own relationship with Hashem that we
increase in our love of Hashem and our
connection to Hashem and we increase in
our connection to the Torah.
And not only that, but if we leave this
shabas, this con convention and we say
I'm going to play my role and all of us
play our role as we go into
hashem the almighty should look down at
all of us and say look at the my kinder
and I say hes please now look down at
all of these people in the room all of
these people who but Ezra Hashem are
coming out of ing beautiful and powerful
shabas. Please see the efforts that they
and we together but after going to make
for your children. Look down please and
bring back all of the all of the Jewish
people now. Thank you very much.
Ladies and gentlemen, this past summer,
this past summer,
I had the great honor of interviewing
a group of guys and specifically
the leader of the group. No, it wasn't
the guy they called Mike. It was Zebie
Sam. And
and what started off as a story of a
basketball team and its road to a
championship
turned into a story
and an ongoing journey, not only a team,
but of communities around the tri-state
area and beyond.
This journey
was is an individual journey for
everyone on the team. It's a journey of
a man, a young man named Zebie Samid who
has who has who has created leaders and
has created men of boys and people ready
to take responsibility further in Cla
Israel. Ladies and gentlemen, just a
short clip of this past year's Tishabove
film from Project Inspire.
Swallow away three for the lead. For the
lead.
Time off. Farming nail.
Oh my goodness.
Demi salmon.
Zebie is our third out of five children.
Leinhara, ever since he was a little
child, we noticed that he had a lot of
energy. I just looked for what can I do
to help channel this energy? What can I
do to help nurture it in the best way
possible? I would teach him how to play
catch and how to throw. And very early
on, we noticed that he had some talent,
a lot of natural talent.
>> Learning wasn't that easy for him. We
went through number of schools during
his childhood, but all the while we
tried to still build that sports
ability.
>> My parents found a school in Tene, which
is called TABC, Tour Academy of Bergen
County. Every single class was 40
minutes. My parents thought that it was
amazing for me for my attention and to
be able to sit still and and they had
sports teams.
>> We actually have a lot of appreciation
for this incredible coach that Zevy had
throughout high school. He really
believed in all of his players and he
really believed in Zevy and Zevy felt
it. He at one point even told Zevy that,
you know, Zevy, you express that you
really want to be good at basketball.
You actually have the potential to be
the best
>> Yeah.
>> player that ever stepped on this court.
It's in your hands. And he loved that.
He loved that motivation.
Basketball did prove to help him sit in
class, focus, grow as a student and grow
as a person. And it proved to be a very
healthy, productive outlet.
>> After TABC, he went to yeshiva nurs. And
Zebie really adapted to that
inspiration. Really caught on pretty
quickly. They also have a nice gym over
there in which he could continue to
practice.
>> Then it came time after Sha Alf to
decide what he's going to do for the
next year. My husband said to him,
"Zevy, you should be thinking about is
not where you're going to be learning
more, but where you're going to be happy
learning." That helped him make the
decision to go to YU.
>> Coming into YU, first day I met the guys
on the team, I see one guy with a red
hair, afro with earrings, see another
guy with tattoos. A lot of these guys
were not affiliated at all. I created a
whole organization called Beyond the
Court, which is the initiative of Beyond
the Court Stuff to help these guys just
have an awesome time in Yiddish to do
team bonding, but to show them that
Yiddishkite is not a bunch of rules and
not a bunch of dos and don'ts, but it's
just having a good time and how to make
a good schmuck in Yiddish.
>> We saw a lot of transformation of the
guys on the team throughout the years
and they themselves shared how much they
have grown learning from Zevy and
learning with Zevy.
>> Zevy's secret is he leads by action. He
doesn't really tell us what to do. He
just does it. And that's how we kind of
follow him by his positivity and his
actions.
This past year when YU started, they
came in as the number one seed in their
conference and that was really the time
to shine and try to get to that
championship to win it and move to the
next level.
A lot of anticipation up to that game.
We knew a lot of people were going to
come. The championship was a roller
coaster. We came to the locker room down
14 and we were very down. We were just
in the same situation
the previous year and it was uh
heartbreaking to lose. I had two fouls.
So my coach saw me out and I go into the
locker room. I put my head down said,
"Hashem, if we lose, help me try to
accept it. But if we win," I said, "I
never promise." But I said, "Hashem, I
promise I'm going to use my platform to
inspire many people." And I just started
making shot after shot and we started
coming back and one by one we made
shots. They missed shots. Everything
happened in our favor. This was like the
biggest nace I saw in front of my eyes.
>> Come up with play after play. Zebie flo
three. Are you kidding me? Falls back
for three again. Count that one.
>> There were 30 seconds left in the game
and they were up by one. Zebie just he
dribbled across that court and uh and he
trusted the work he's put in and we all
trusted him and uh we trusted God too.
>> Fall away three for the lead for the
lead.
Time out. Farmingale.
Oh my goodness.
Zie
with a fall away three to take the lead
with 15 seconds to go. After the
championship game, we all go into the
locker room and I get in there and I'm
like thinking like these guys are going
all be playing rap music. And I get in
there and they stop and they look at me
and they go, "Ready guys?" And they all
go in together.
>> On the bus ride afterwards, just playing
music, having a good time, but they're
all wearing tits. At that moment, I
realized basketball can inspire not just
tens, but thousands of people. He took
the opportunity to look beyond himself
and to look at the team members that
he's playing with and to inspire them
and to help them grow and each team
member did grow and they loved sharing
with us and with areas that they did
grow in life and in Yiddish kite and
getting closer to Hashem.
>> Now I keep kosher. I keep most Shabbats.
I try my best and I want to do kush
every Friday night and keep all the
holidays. We might have different
backgrounds, different pasts, different
shortcomings, different experiences, but
we're all Jews. We're all Yidden trying
to do the same thing. Coming closer to
Hashem, each in our own way
is ultimately just be yourself. You have
to be yourself. You have to try your
best in your own way. But then to always
look out for opportunities,
ladies and gentlemen, what a beautiful
story.
What a beautiful story. However, as we
learned this shabas, an inspiring story
is just simply not enough. It's what we
do with it afterwards. I just want to
mention before we go further that Zebie
Samit's parents and grandfather are in
the room. Want to welcome you and thank
you for joining us here tonight.
Inspiration itself is not enough. So how
can we make it practical? How do we
change the lives of the team with our
community? And so we decided to make a
beautiful Shabbatone
because Zevi reached out to Project
Inspire knowing that if you want to
utilize the single most powerful tool in
outreach, our Torah community, Project
Inspire was the way to do it. And so we
searched for a place where, as Zevy put
it, where could we get the best food
and the most food and how could we make
an amazing experience? And of course,
the answer was
Lakewood.
And so Project Inspire and Zevie Sam and
the team embarked on what turned out to
be a life-changing Shabaton together.
Ladies and gentlemen, a small glimpse
into the Shabaton in Lakewood.
We as a community you don't realize the
people that you're dealing with on a
dayto-day. They're actually searching.
All you have to do is open a
conversation.
>> We had the great opportunity to bring
the YU basketball team together with
Zebie Sam to Lakewood. It was an amazing
Shabas. It's so beautiful for these
people to see the beauty of a Shabas,
the beauty of who we really are.
You know, these are not guys who do care
regularly. It's a really nice
opportunity to get involved on a on a
little small scale. So proud of that. We
wanted to give the boys the best
possible experience, the most authentic
experience of Lakewood, a shop in
Lakewood.
>> I couldn't tell you why Lakewood doesn't
have a map if I was asked in ever since
I got here. It was the most incredible
experience ever. It's absolutely
incredible that a community that I'm not
really a part of. Like I didn't grow up
religious at all, but they took all of
us in without any hesitation. They fed
all of us. They took us into their
homes. They met their families. It was
it's really really meaningful to me.
Like it's it's you can tell that it took
a lot of a lot of hard work and a lot of
preparation and we're all very grateful
for it. This chabaton makes me makes me
understand truly the power of the Jewish
community and how our roots are so deep.
It really just inspires it inspired me.
It will keep inspiring me and I will
keep a remembering this weekend. I think
if there there are religious people out
there, I think, you know, small acts, it
doesn't even have to host someone who
maybe is not religious, but even having
a conversation with someone who came
from a different background. If we all
did it, it would change it would change
our our our community and it would
really like change the world. Go all in.
Make a difference in someone's life
because we're all one nation.
Someone asked me, "You think they're
going to keep Chabas? They're not going
to keep Shabas. It's irrelevant." The
fact is that we gave them a taste of
Chabas. You may not see it right now. I
have no doubt that this Chabas was has
impactful on them and their future and
their full their whole life. There's no
question about it. If this opportunity
comes up to you whether you can host a
shabaton together we can go all in and
bring back as many namas as possible.
Ladies and gentlemen, as we heard little
tidbits over Shabas about the power of
that Chabas, it is my absolute honor to
call on members of not only the YU team,
but also the Lakewood community to have
a special interview. And to do that, we
call upon the king of Jewish podcast,
the from podcast. We have with us
tonight, Naki Gordon from Meaningful
Minute is here. And I'd like to welcome
up on stage Zebie Sammit, Tom Valdman,
Roy Iskavitz, Ari Saltz, and Barak
Slattoitz who who made a special trip
from Lakewood tonight who could not be
with us on Chabis. And the interviewer
of course our the the world famous now,
Nahi Gordon. Thank you, Nahi.
What's going on everybody? How was
Shabas here? It was good.
Come on. Come on. Zebie, you want to
know what's the most Jewish thing about
me? I think I got to turn these on. By
the way, guys, they ain't turning on for
you. Can you imagine? Most Jewish thing
about me is I feel like I could beat you
in a 101. You know, like what? Like
what's why do I think that? Why do I
think that? It makes no sense. So
yesish. I don't know. I just I think I
could. Next year, Project Inspire is
gonna show a video of me beating you.
Sorry, you know, but we're not gonna
talk about that right now. I'm joined by
some awesome people here on stage. Got
to speak a little bit to Tom and Roy
before we came up here. Met you guys for
the first time. Tom, I'm loving the hat.
It fits you perfectly.
Yeah, there we go. That person who
clapped is from Lakewood, right?
Um, I want to start with you, Roy. Tell
me about your upbringing. What was your
background?
>> So, um I'm from non-religious family. Uh
we celebrate all the holidays and uh we
pretty much like the most Israelis in uh
Israel. Um coming to white and then I
looking I left Israel when I was 15,
played high school ball in Northern
California
uh for four years, then look looked for
colleges to play and then chose YU.
Then uh come and then I came to YU.
Didn't really know much about you know
uh Judaism at all. And then I met Zevy
and uh I got the honor to meet this uh
amazing guy and kind of taught me a
little bit about Judaism and and kind of
um shared me the the love that he has
for Judaism and I kind of picked it
>> from him. So now I really enjoy it. that
really do a lot of different things from
start picking from dime in the morning
to b to many more and
>> wow I want to ask you specifically
growing up what was your I guess when
you thought about from Jews you know
what was the thought process like
>> so as I can speak for myself I think uh
didn't really know much about them
>> there's always like a bad kind of
connotation or like a negative uh
feeling about them because I guess I
didn't know much,
>> right? I saw, by the way, sidebar, this
is how my brain works, guys. Sorry
you're going to stick with me. You took
a dig at the red afro. You don't mess
with the redheads, man. We're good. Come
on, Zie. Not cool. Tom, tell me a little
bit about about your background, where
you grew up. What was your background?
What's what's your upbringing like?
>> Um, same. I grew up in Israel in
same non-religious uh family. Uh, we do
keep uh all the holidays. We do We do sh
everything. Um, also when I came to YU,
I didn't really know uh how to put
filling on. The last time that I put
filling was my bar mitzvah. So it was a
long time ago. And uh when I met Zev,
you just everything changed. Uh he just
knows how to come the right way and just
kind of like get through you and go to
your heart and just um
do it do it with love.
>> Yeah. So, you know what we saw in the
video, Zebie, was nice glimpse. Sure.
So, I'm curious what your coach was
thinking when you took that step back
fade away with 15 seconds left. He he
was no way he was happy about that,
right? There's no way.
>> I think I think
>> you're good. Yeah.
>> I think he's posted something afterwards
saying like sometimes coaches coach and
sometimes you got to let players play.
>> Yeah.
>> Said as long as it went in, he was okay.
>> Yeah. As long as it went in. Yeah,
that's true. That's true. Obviously,
you've had a real impact on your
teammates throughout the year, you know,
talking about just the story, getting
them more involved in Judaism, but
specifically I want to talk about where
the Shabas came into the play, right?
Tell me a little bit about that from
your perspective.
>> For sure. Um,
it's really like first of all, before I
go anywhere, I want to say anything.
This is the first time I'm publicly in
front of people.
>> Let's go. Give him a round of applause.
Let's go, everybody. Come on. make him
feel comfortable.
>> I just want to thank project inspire for
everything they've done from the
>> picture everyone in the crowd wearing a
striml like show him and everything will
be easy right?
>> Yeah. But it really all started by is
really all desire from A to Z from how
it all started from getting them to put
on fill in to having a minion to doing
team Shabatones. And I said to myself,
listen, I can raise $1,000 and do a team
shabatone in Wu. We'll get Chalant.
We'll have to warm it up somehow. We'll
figure out that stuff. But I said, why
don't we figure out a way where we can
have Shabatones in communities for
people just to go all out for these guys
and show them how Gishmak Shabas is. And
it was really all started. I was in
touch with Charlie Harrari and he told
me, "Why don't you do Project Inspire?
They just did a Tish film of you."
>> I was like, "I didn't know they do these
things."
>> And we got in touch again and they said,
"We're all in." And I said, "Listen, I
remember calling her by Samson over and
over again." And I said, "Unlimited
food. Unlimited food and more food." He
goes, he called me a few days later. He
said, "Okay, I'm working on getting a
couple people." I said, "Did you tell
them unlimited food?" And I said, "The
more gashmas, which really is rnas that
you throw in,
>> the more rnas we can throw into them."
And they went all in for the food.
>> Lakewood has good food. I liquid where
is that? It's
>> always did a great job.
>> Jersey, I don't know. I think I've heard
of it. I'm not sure Ari
Barak, right? You guys are in touch with
Project Inspire. You're like, "Okay,
we're gonna we're going to host this
Chabas. We're going to bring an entire
basketball team." All the mothers out
there, I want you to understand how much
these guys probably eat. So, when a
Zebie says unlimited food, it's not the
same as your family, you know? It's just
probably not. It's a basketball team.
You took on this challenge of like we're
going to host this Shabus. What inspired
you to do that?
>> So, I'll start off saying that Debbie
said everything was Seattle desaya. The
message of unlimited food never got
through to us.
>> Oh man.
>> I'm I'm serious. Legit, it probably
never would have happened.
>> Um
>> it's just a regular liquid chav. It's
unlimited food, right?
>> Regular.
So actually I had the privilege of
learning by Rabius in Asia and I met uh
the rashiva
and he always told us you know we got to
do something with our lives and we got
to do kir and we got to inspire people
and to be honest I never really did
always felt a little guilty about it and
so when called up and said hey we want
to do shabaton can you help arrange it
just flash of inspiration I said, "Sure,
no problem. We'll do it." And I remember
being in the car. I was on my way back
from a meeting. And that was it. It
wasn't It was no hesitation. It wasn't
like, "Let me think about it. Let me ask
my wife because, you know, sometimes you
just got to just jump right in it." And
that's what happened.
>> That's wild.
>> Yeah.
>> But it didn't end there. It wasn't just
a beautiful shabas, right? That's not
where the story ends. If it did, we
wouldn't be here up up here doing this.
Tell me a little bit about what happened
next. Yeah. So the guys really kept in
touch like you know sch smoozing and
they came back actually for a second
chabas a couple of weeks right after
which was amazing. And then at one point
um one of the guys Schleaming said hey
if you guys keep shabas again I'll take
you out to reserve cut. And
>> that's liquid baby. That's liquid guys.
>> You keep shabas we're going to reserve
cut. Nice.
>> Yeah. And they were what were you guys
like 15 guys went out or something like
that.
>> 12 guys. and just things just kept
going. It was like one week, let's do
another week, another week and you know,
we're the guys are still in touch, you
know, I just was smooing with Tom and I
said, you know, what's your pesak plans?
And he said, oh, I'm going to be in the
city with my mom. I said, in the city
with your mom. Come to me for the seder.
And he said, okay, great. And that's it.
Just like that. Easy peasy.
>> That's crazy. That's that's that's
literally the project the inspire way is
the second things you think are over
it's to keep it going to keep it going a
little bit more and a little bit more
and bar you were there you were involved
in the shabbasim and I heard that maybe
the shabbasim did a lot more for you
than maybe the voice can you tell me
about that
>> I think
I think that project I was part of the
project inspire project inspires the
project transformed I It was kind of it
was said over and over, but we went away
with a lot more than I think they went
away with because if you think about it,
how much we really change in our lives.
We go through life, we hear, how much
does the average person that is born
from change in their lifetime.
>> Yeah.
>> And to watch people that they're not
people that were seeking necessarily,
they weren't necessarily seeking. They
weren't people that had a life event
that made them look something. They just
transformed their life one step at a
time. And I I was just amazed. I started
off going to one event. I went to the
Kish and I went to every event there and
then Ari had them come back again and I
was I was just more part of the
inspiration than they were.
>> Wow. Roy Tom. So what would you say your
life is different before the Shabas and
now post the Shabas that liquid chabas?
>> Um mainly the the main difference um
before and after. So before I felt like
um
how Shabbat could be like very serious
thing, very serious. You have like a
time schedule of like you have to do
this this and that. You have to do kush
at a certain time, you have to um um you
know hear a speech and and go through
all that and and after that lakewood uh
Shabbat I felt like everything is much
more calm.
>> Yeah. Shabbat is really like a at least
time to rest and and kind of gather your
thoughts and and kind of prepare for the
the following week that you have after.
So you kind of it's like a kind of like
time to relax like
>> Yeah. Tom, besides for the hat, what has
changed in your life?
>> Uh
>> guys, can we get him a a Borcelino brand
deal? Bigger size. Borcelino. Let's go.
Um I mean after Shabbat in Lakewood um
just everything changed. I saw a
different a different religious
community and it's just it it changed my
whole life. I kept eight Shabbats in a
row. Um wow.
And after this eight eight Shabbats,
Zevi was like, "All right, like I'm
going to reward you." And I got
something for it. But after that, I did
three Shabbat totally for uh for myself,
for God, and for Zevie.
>> Yeah.
And uh now that's uh my 11th Shabet that
I keep.
>> Wow. Um, I feel like Tom of two years
ago would never believe that it's it's
going to happen and and it it's actually
going to be me, but I feel like after
this Shabbat in Lakewood is just changed
my life. Wow. And it didn't it didn't
end there. There's a lot of programs. I
know you guys are, you know,
incentivized keep Shabas and Shabbas and
that's eight meals at Reserve Cut. Like
I'm in like first of all, where do I
sign up? I got to meet the Schlam Ingra
guy. I've been to Reserve Cut once. I've
been keeping Shabas for a long time. Um,
gotta speak to that guy. But Zebie,
bring it home. You know, wrap up the
message about what you experienced this
whole story. What's your takeaway?
>> Question. You know, it's really hard to
just explain it in words. It's very hard
to just explain it in words because
I feel it like I don't really know how
to explain it. It's just the fact is
that I've been keeping Shabas my whole
life and we have guys here
>> that are like I'll just give one small
example for Tom the other week I told
him right before Shabas I said Tom why
don't you keep Shabas this week he goes
I already did the challenge and I said
please just just this is the only time
you're going to really be able to do it
for God threw his phone across the room
he goes you're my Hashem I said don't
say that
>> but um
>> we actually had that once it didn't go
well Tom it it was bad not a good
The idea was cute, but I but he told me
Friday night, he said, "Z, Zevy, I
didn't tell my girlfriend and I didn't
tell my parents that I'm keeping Chabas.
What do I do?" I said, "Tom, they're
going to, you know, they're going to
panic a little bit, but they'll be
okay." He said, "You know what? I'm
going to do it." And after Shabas, he
called them and they panicked and then
they were okay. And he just feels good.
And I think the message for all of us
who are involved and are able to help
out, it's try your best to be real
yourself because when you're real
yourself, the people around you see it
and go out of your way and try to do
something extra. For me, I'm with them
and Hashem just throws ideas in my mind
and I just do crazy things with these
guys and hashem it's working.
>> But everybody here, try your best to go
out, reach out and help out one another.
>> Amazing. Thank you so much, guys.
Listen, that's the power of project to
inspire. Progynous fire getting people
and empowering people. Everyone in this
room just want to let you know just to
wrap this up. This could be you. You can
do this with somebody. Whether it's a
neighbor, a friend, a family member. I
promise you these guys probably never
thought it would be them. And now it's
them. And it could be you, too. Thank
you all for listening.
>> And Zebie, I will beat you in that 101.
I'm just saying. Okay. Thank you. Bye.
Ladies and gentlemen, Naki Gordon
meaningful minute and the YU basketball
team as well as the Laker guys. Thank
you so much for all being here tonight.
Ladies and gentlemen, as a reminder as a
reminder of what transpired in Lakewood
with this Wu basketball team, it's been
mentioned many times over Shabas Mashem.
many groups will be coming our way and
wanting to run Shabatones and we look
forward to reaching out to you as
communities and individuals to host. A
special shout out to Ari Salt who just
took a little part of this interview but
really was the brains and the organizer
behind this entire Shabaton. And yes,
Ari can be you as well. Ladies and
gentlemen, over the over the many years
of the Project Inspire Convention, we've
had
we've had the great honor of having
amazing and world famous speakers from
far and near.
These days, once upon a time, he was in
England, and these days he's from near.
From the Edmond J. Saffra synagogue, the
rabbi of the Edmond J. Saffra Synagogue,
a dear friend not only of mine and of
Project Inspires. Ladies and gentlemen,
it is my great honor to welcome Rabbi
Schlommo Fari.
Wow. First of all, Zaku is how we would
say it in my to the entire basketball
team for your wins on and off the court.
That is incredible.
As I'm sitting here tonight,
um, my main speech is really supposed to
be tomorrow, but as I'm sitting here
tonight, I can't help but be a little
bit overwhelmed
by the unbelievable feeling that the Gim
describes as
all of Israel is
responsible one for the other. But it's
very interesting because there seems to
be a little bit of a discrepancy in how
it says the mahammar and how it should
say the mahamar.
It should say one would ostensibly
assume z. But why are there two
different
of responsibility one for the other and
one which says z
the maharal gives us an unbelievable
answer and that's really where I want to
start my words to you tonight. The
Maharal explains that the word here
doesn't only mean that we are
responsible but rather the word comes
from the word
that we are intermingled. We are
interwoven. We are connected one to the
other. Every time you find in lashon
a word which has more than one meaning,
we aren't trying to tell you it means
this or it means this. We're trying to
tell you it means all of these. Our
responsibility one for the other comes
from the fact that we are indivisible
one from the other. Our lot is cast in
one with the other. And therefore it is
not z is z. We are literally mixed
together. I am a perfect example. My
father is Syrian. My mother is a yakid
from Germany
zaz.
But my friends let me help hopefully
drive this message home. In this week's
parasa, we read again and again about
creating the v various khim of the
mikdash and the raan and theim and
others all ask the same question. Why is
it that we mention
you should do, you should do, you should
do, but then one time we say the words
only when it comes to the of all of the
the holy ark that sits in the
that carries within it the does it say
the words
and you should make in plural and not
and you should make in the singular. Let
me read to you the words of the holy
sh is giving us a hint.
The essence of Torah
cannot exist
only when all of Israel is operating
together. So therefore there is no
possibility of
I don't care if you're ash if you're an
ili if you're someone who does mitzvot
to perfection you could never build the
aon by yourself. It is only something
that can be done together
all as one. One nation, indivisible,
undivided, under God. My friends, our
Yiddishkite, ours, is not whole without
each and every one of theirs. I think
most people think that this is about
giving another Jew a chance, helping
someone else with their Judaism. But
actually, what we're learning from the
is my Judaism is their Judaism. My
fromkite is their fromkite and to leave
them alone and to let them wander
without it is something that we simply
cannot do. Project inspire is not asking
you to do something that akadoshu
did not already ask you to do in his
Torah. So my friends, we are just being
reminded of a debt that we already have
to ackadu.
Recently I took a trip to Poland with uh
one of the groups and we walked through
the cemeteries in Warsaw in places like
Lodge and I mentioned to them something.
I've been to Poland more than 70 times.
I lived in London and from there it was
a very short flight. Almost all of the
times that I went were from there. I
only went from America once.
But my friends, I pointed out, look at
the names on the graves
and people started coming back to me and
I have a list that I keep and I'm going
to read you some of the names that I saw
in Warsaw and Lodge.
Gavika anyone his name is Glea?
No. Henfeller anyone? Carbos
Fleer Boy Hawaro
Zaki Kovati a single one of those names.
Is anyone here named that name? Or does
anyone here even know someone who has
one of those names? So I went to our
tour guide, Sie Spermer, and I said, "I
think I know a lot of Jews. How come
I've never heard any of these names?"
And he stopped short and he looked at me
and he said something to me that took my
breath away. He said, "Shomo, you
haven't heard those names cuz those
families don't exist anymore.
Every last member of those families was
wiped out in the Quran in Europe."
My friends, when I come back from
Poland, I think of that all the time.
You see, why we lost so many people to
bullets and gas chambers. Why we lost so
many people to stabbing and starving and
sickness and ghettos. We are losing far
more Jews,
not even to people walking away from
Judaism.
They don't even know that they have it.
They don't even know what it is.
They're not leaving. They're just
living. Living a life of Knicks games,
basketball, football, living a life of
college, and school, not even knowing
that there's anything missing from their
life until you and me step in. because
we have an opportunity to save entire
families.
And I have met many of these people who
will tell me, "I'm the only one in my
family who keeps anything."
If that boy or that girl does not come
on a Shabbaton, listen to a Torah class,
was not given a pair of Kaneka candles,
had no one asked them to put a pair of
tilene on, that is one more name to add
to my sadly growing list. So my friends,
I ask you, what do we want to do about
that after being inspired over an entire
week? The Torah gives us the answer to
this. the greatest leader the Jewish
people ever had. His name was Moshe. Not
Zevi, but Moshe. You're close, by the
way.
And Moshe's whole journey, where does it
start? It starts with one Jew.
It starts with him seeing one Jew and
thinking to himself, I don't know if I
could save all of them, but I could save
this one. So, how could I not save this
one? Moshe's efforts actually almost
cost him his life. He is saved by a
miracle. My friends, I believe that
inside every single one of us and Raman
echoes my sentiments lives a Moshe
Rabenu capable of caring about one Jew.
But I will end my words with a story in
triplicate. Please don't kill me.
My friends, there's another layer to the
meaning of the
make for me an Aon. On top of the Aon
sits the two kiruim who have the face of
children.
And my friends, we always think that
when we are helping somebody else, we
are bringing Judaism to them. But I have
a question for you tonight.
Raise your hand if you are having no
troubles whatsoever in of your children.
Raise your hands if you have no issues.
Anyone?
I don't see I mean there's lights but I
don't see one hand. One hand in the
back. Oh, he don't have kids. Yeah.
I don't know. By the way, I can't see
anything. I'm like blinded right here.
Unless you were just randomly saying hi
at that perfectly timed moment. Hi
my friends. You know why is so hard?
Rev. Burkowitz just told me I saw him
last week that in our world one year is
the equivalent of an entire generation.
Think about what our world looked like
just one year ago. where AI was like,
the various changes that happened in
society, what's going on right now in
the city that I'm a rabbi in New York
City
with Mandani changing the rules of the
game day by day. My friends, I need to
ask you this question.
Does anybody in this room
not want a magic pill to take care of
their children?
The puk says
you will rejoice in front of your God.
says
the Levite, the convert, the orphan, and
the widow. Four,
God says those four belong to me because
they don't have anybody. And Hashem
says, I am the father of I am the Dian
Alman. Those are mine.
your son, your daughter, your workers,
those are yours. Hashem says, "I promise
you, you take care of mine, I'll take
care of yours." We don't know what AI is
going to do. But I can tell you one
thing, one person who knows exactly how
to deal with AI, and that is Hakadosh
Baraku, whose name is Adon-
AI. He is the master of everything,
including AI. He is the master of
whether or not there will be war with
Iran, whether the DSA stands for
Democratic Socialists of America or
dementia society in America.
My friends, can we not let him drive?
Will we not let him drive? And the only
way we can do that is by taking care of
his. My friends, when I was growing up,
my father would all the time do this to
me. I don't know if any of you have had
this. I'd be walking along and my father
would take my face and he would go like
this. Slow-mo, look over there.
And invariably, there was nothing
interesting. He was always shoving my
face into a bush, into a tree. Not
literally, but and I didn't know what he
was doing. And I said, "Aba, what are
you doing?" And my father would say to
me, I I will not forget this as long as
I live. My father said to me, Schlommo,
someone from our is driving their car on
Shabbat.
And if they see that the rabbi or his
family saw them, then they'll be
embarrassed. And if they'll be
embarrassed, maybe they'll hesitate to
come to shul for the shame. So look over
there. This is the childhood that I had.
My friends, I always wondered where my
father got that. And at the yard site
from my grandfather, my uncle told the
following story. He was walking through
the streets in Halab Aleppo in Syria.
And all of a sudden, there was a little
alleyway and his father, my grandfather,
who I'm named after, Schlommoari, shoved
my uncle into the alleyway. And my uncle
said, "What'd you do that for?" And he
said because there's someone from the
shul he had a grocery store who owes me
money and every time he sees me he
promises me he will pay me back next
week next week. Next week I know he
doesn't have the money. So why should I
let him see my face? And why should he
be embarrassed to see mine? Suddenly I
understood that that had come not from
my father but from his father. And only
last year as I'm walking down the street
of Madison Avenue where my synagogue is
right off the corner of 63rd and
Madison, my son Yitzkak turns to me and
says, "Aba, look over here." And I
looked and I said, "What do you mean?"
And he said, "Someone from our just got
into a taxi cab." And I knew that you
wouldn't want him to see that you had
seen him get into a taxi cab.
I am Schlommo.
He was Schlommo. My son is Yitzk. My
father is Yitzk. My friends, you want
those values in your kids. Take care not
to embarrass another Jew. Take care to
raise up another Jew. And the dividends
will not only play off in your
obligations to the Torah, but
and you will make
your children the
angels will be growing up in the
because of what you've done for Hashem's
for. Thank you so much.
You have people who have strong Jewish
backgrounds connecting with people who
don't necessarily have Torah
backgrounds. They come together and they
share that Torah with each other. That's
the mission of Project Inspire.
I got involved through Rebe Sidner from
the village show. The main trip that we
had recently was the trip to Israel. The
project inspired leadership trip. The
>> idea was can we bring 40 50 guys from
North America who all went to yeshiva
who all learned.
>> We toured every day. We met Rab Gman. We
met at the end of the trip and the
leaders of project inspire they sat us
down and said now what
>> they said okay we got to have a learning
program. Let's bring the firm community
and non-firm community. Let's bring them
together.
>> From this trip, Tara 2.0 Toronto Project
Inspire Village Shaw was born.
>> They all came back on fire and they kept
bringing people from their shores,
reaching out to more and more people to
come learn.
>> When it was all said and done, we had
150 plus lom and malam that were
learning on a weekly basis. It strikes
me as a necessity for Jewish people to
make people aware of what their heritage
is and what better way to do it through
study, through Ashul, through community.
>> Bringing Jews to in understanding uh how
what it is to be a Jew, how is to have a
connection with Hashem, understanding
how the Torah is an instruction manual
for life.
>> We've got all these people who want to
learn, who want to grow. I've been
coming for quite a few sessions now.
We'll have a great Havarusa and it's
rounded out by the good company and some
food and drink.
>> This is something I want to be a part of
cuz I want to sort of meet new people,
meet other Jews, and continue building a
life of Torah. I know for myself
personally, Makabusa pretty much every
week, texts me in the morning, he says,
"Yakov, are you coming?" I'm like, "You
better believe it." Just looking around
the whole room and seeing the array of
people learning, it's very incredible to
see. Written material that we're given
to study is really well written.
week cars and to another week the cuffs.
>> It's actually at a reasonably uh deep uh
level. Tonight we're studying about
blessings and basically showing
gratitude. I'm constantly working on
that.
>> A guy walks up to me as he was leaving
Torah 2.0 and he said, "Rabbi, I just
want to tell you, you have no idea how
much I've learned in this program." And
this guy is, you know, he's not from
yet. He says, "Besides what I've
learned, just starting to learn Torah
has showed me that there's so much I
don't yet know and there's so much more
for me to learn." He goes, "And that's
been eye opening for me. This is one
person with one story."
>> For me, Kira was basically a new
experience. Seeing how people are coming
from the other side to Yiddish, it's
tremendously rewarding. I'm so happy
that I could do a little part. My hope
is that uh the relationship between the
village school and project inspire
continues to grow. We continue to
inspire hundreds more and that project
inspire furthers their mission around
the world to replicate this many many
many times over.
Ladies and gentlemen, as Project Inspire
2.0 I know continues to thrive in
Toronto. It is my honor to introduce to
you Yako Freeman who came all the way
from Toronto to be here with us this
Shabas for project inspire village shul
Torah 2.0 I know.
It's extremely humbling to be up here. I
finally got the courage and then we hear
from Fari these beautiful words. The
whole Shabas we've been having one
speaker after another, professionals,
best of the best. So, I think we should
just put on the YU basketball video
again and I'll just go sit down at my
table.
Thank you, Yosi. Once again, you pulled
off a beautiful event. First class all
the way
from A to Z or like in Canada we say A
to Zed. I I seriously think I don't
think Yasi ever sleeps. No matter what
time I text him, it could be 11 o'clock
at night, 6:00 in the morning, within a
minute there's a couple dots on my phone
and he's responding. We really
appreciate everything he does. I also
want to thank my good friend Rafaim
Samson for everything he does for the
organization.
I think on a weekly basis I get at least
two or three WhatsApp messages and or
phone calls and he's the only person I
know that gives my mother a run for her
money. She could leave me a five minute
WhatsApp message. You're pretty close.
But he always with his wit and with his
generous nature, he always asks, "What
can we do? what you need to move this
program forward, what's the next
project, and we really appreciate it.
Finally, I'd like to say a shout out to
our good friend Dr. Steuart Heightman,
uh, chairman of the board of Project
Inspire
for everything he does, not only
starting this movement, I think would
have no told you, Stuart, now is the
time. He'll be so proud of this
beautiful movement you started. Thank
you so much for everything you do. and
we get to see you on a weekly basis at
our learning program. So, thank you so
much.
ROI, return on investment. Every
businessman knows what that is. You look
at what you're spending and you wonder,
is the return worth it? You do it in
business. You do it in a cure
organization. You're spending millions
of dollars.
How do you gauge success?
If 50 women go on a trip and one woman
comes back and keeps ta is that a
success? If a hundred men go to and 99
come back and have a weekly kusa, is
that success? How do we gauge success?
I want to share with you a story I once
heard that changed my perspective on
cure.
In 2012 at the kinis of Schluhos,
Mrs. From Shapiro addressed from
Australia, addressed the crowd and gave
the keynote address. I'm not sure why I
watched it. Maybe it was the Australian
accent,
but she said a story over about her
grandfather, Rabbi Gutnik.
He was was in Melbourne, Australia as a
for the Reb in the early 40s. Australia
wasn't what it is nowadays with a
vibrant community. It was was very
secular.
And the Reb asked Rabb Goodnik Zassal to
make an evening to invite women from the
city to talk about Tarba, Shabas, Mila.
He prepared
that evening only one woman showed up.
Obviously, he was very let down
all this effort. And he told the Reb,
"Maybe I should go back to New York."
The Reb told him words that I I'll never
forget. He said, "Raf,
Mosher Raenu only had one mother."
You don't know if that one woman that
came to your event will go home, decide
she wants to live a life, marry a from
person, her son might be a rashiva, a
RV, influencing hundreds and thousands
of people. You never know.
So the point that I took out of that was
every single yid that we bring closer to
mitzvah is important. But we also have
to be cognizant of the fact that as long
as there is one yid that is not living
the life that's not keeping shabas our
job is not done. We can rest
on the project inspire leadership trip
as was built. An amazing trip, but
that's for another discussion. I don't
want Yasi to start getting upset at me.
Although that what I said about you
doesn't count toward my time.
It was it was tremendous trip. At the
end of the trip, Yasi and Kim sat us
down. We broke into groups and they
said, "Okay, gentlemen, we had a fun
week. We learned a lot. What are we
going to do? What's the next project?
We all have done the breakfasts and the
dinners and the monthly gettogethers,
but we wanted to do something with Kum,
something that's going to last. So, we
had about eight Malam that went on this
trip for Malam. And we said each one
will be responsible to get two or three
friends and together with Rabbi Sitner
who was our trip leader and the RV of
the village sh in Toronto a cure of
powerhouse for many of you who have been
on trips with him he's fantastic
his schul has a tremendous membership of
on the journey people and he says you
find the malam to have and I'll find the
lom We decided we're going to have a
five to six week program of learning
preprinted material with help from
project inspire. Every week a different
topic in English and Hebrew easy to
follow along
and what unfolded was truly
unbelievable.
We got maybe 25 30 malam to agree to
this. Three days later Abner says
35 people showed up. So we started
getting we need more malam. then 70
people. When this program was finally
started, there were over 150 people
learning together on a weekly basis.
Truly unbelievable.
And it was so successful that we're
still doing it. This was between Pes and
it continued every week. We don't always
get 150. People have weddings. People
have homework with their kids. But we
still have some weeks 50 people, some
weeks 125, sometimes 140. People have a
thirst for Tory. And no one understands
this better than Project Inspire. They
they know. We all know when your son is
three, many of us take him to to RV or
to Rebi and the Rebi gives him some
honey and points to the letters of the
olive face because when you show someone
the sweetness of the Tyra, when you show
someone the sweetness of being a fromid,
they come back for more. They want more.
And Project Inspire guides you every
step of the way. So, we're really
grateful for their leadership and for
their for all the help they give all
organizations.
I'm looking at the crowd. I had the
pleasure of meeting many of you over
Shabas. Everyone here has a passion for
curve and wants to do something. Like
Rab Shapiro mentioned when he opened up
with a diva, it's a lot warmer in Miami
than Terrytown, New York. None of us are
here for a vacation.
We're here because we feel like we
either want to learn new strategies or
we want to learn how to get more
involved. So I say please reach out to
Yasi, reach out to reach out to project
inspire. They'll give you the tools to
see how in your communities you could
bring something there. And I just want
to conclude by giving everyone here a
you all should be blessed with
from your children
and we all should be learning together
in your
Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, one of the special
guests that comes to the Project Inspire
Convention year in and year out
to share with us his wisdom and his
partnership is Rev. David and his wife
Revit Debbie Greenblat.
Rabbid's father. They get a round of
applause for him.
Rabbd's father, Ravnat Zatal, was the
rebby for all of us in terms of what it
meant to love and care for another Jew.
Ladies and gentlemen, Project Inspire
compiled a tiny glimpse into the
selfless and cloud dedicated life of
Ravena Greenblad Zatal.
My great uncle Renata Greenblat filled
the room. His personality, his charisma.
There's no one else in that room that
you wanted to listen to. Whether it was
Dyra, his story, his humor was a
brisker.
He had an unusual command of learning
with a derm that was unique to him.
>> To watch my father talk in Torah, to
watch him give a shir was to watch pure
joy. Pure joy. You can say that of not
needing enough causes of that's what it
mean. There wasn't an aspect of Yiddish
kai that he didn't mastery baltazin
mile
gin cipher built mcfire build sit onto
nitra he knew everything
it was unbelievable and he knew it from
a practical point not just from a issue
>> every single sug in that he was fluent
in and familiar with he got down to the
core of the suga he was able to Posin on
every issue that was put forth to him.
>> He became someone upon whom Rib Mosha
came to rely to answer the shilas that
people would call Rasha with.
>> He didn't see himself or his scholarship
or his his husmada or talents as
differentiating him from anyone else. He
was incredibly humble. He dressed
humbly. He never spoke about himself. He
put everyone's needs first. There's no
distance he wouldn't travel to help
someone to help a you didn't need. My
grandfather's sense of responsibility
came from looking at the Jewish people
from a big picture perspective. He felt
a deep aras for Kalisel and for Yiddish
in America, particularly for communities
that didn't have leaders. He saw an ad
in the newspaper that um the city of
Memphis was looking for a a Kazna Torah
teacher and uh and he went
>> he laid a foundation and started a day
school and took people who knew nothing
and as a result of his hard sweat and
toil, the people who came out of Memphis
were connected to Yiddish kite.
My father-in-law, Larry Brown, grew up
in a traditional home. He went to an
afternoon school at Talmura, but was not
an observant Jew at that time. Did not
keep chabas.
>> I was a typical teenager running around
town with with my buddies.
>> My father befriended him and uh my
father asked Larry why he doesn't come
to the shul on chabas.
>> My father-in-law said, "Rabbi, I have a
paper root." He says, "And how much do
you earn and from your paper roots?"
Four paper roots I earn $1.50 every
Saturday. He says, "What should be if I
give you a $150 to come to synagogue on
Chabis?" He said, "You're willing to
give me a $1.50 to give up my paper
route on Chapas. I'll come I'll come to
Chabas." This meant to my father-in-law
that there's something more valuable
than entrepreneurship. There's something
more valuable than a paper route.
There's something more valuable than
money.
>> My father did give up that paper route
and he did do some learning as a result
of it. He set my father on a path to
Yiddishkai.
>> Today they have generations of borra of
educators of scholars of Tamil and
children grandchildren great
grandchildren.
We have so many things that we do that
many don't know about or many have
participated in. And for a $150 or
whatever it would be or for just caring
and being involved with these neighbors
and friends, we could interest them in
our wonderful lives. And you'd be
surprised what an impact you could make.
>> One small deed can have major ripple
effects and it can affect generations
and generations to come.
My name is Manakiman Nissle
from a town called London, England.
I grew up
what they call modern Orthodox.
I went to theater, opera, and rock
concerts.
When I was 18, I went for a year to
Yeshiva
and I fell in love with learning.
I gave up my place in medical school
and I met a man called Raisha Shapiro.
And after that, I decided it was time
for me to get married.
And my first shock
was the lady called Debbie Brown.
of Memphis, Tennessee.
For me, Memphis sounded the most
glamorous place in the world.
I pictured at every street corner
exotic, cool, black saxophone players
playing for no reason at all, just
because they were cool.
After two weeks, I proposed at the
kosel.
I got the goab got the go-ahad from
Hashem and I asked the go-ahad from my
wife and she said to me, "First, you
have to meet my parents.
I came to Memphis.
Boy, did I have the shock of my life.
I met this gentleman, southern
gentleman, Mr. Larry Brown. He spoke
Very much like the sloth in Zootopia.
Son,
if it's all rat with you,
it's all rat with me.
I had no idea what was happening to me.
It got worse.
He went on to tell me that Memphis was
the third biggest city on the
Mississippi
and handled 50% of the United States
melon crops.
I had no idea what was going on.
Little did I know
that the Browns,
Larry and Lorraine Brown, was involved
with every single part of Tra in that
city. And the next day they introduce me
to the Rebi of Not Greenberg.
Suddenly I'm in this room in this den
and I feel like I'm in your shellish
these old swarm. I remember specifically
an old lady hood was open.
I started talking to this man in
learning and I said to myself, how
fortunate is Cla Israel to have such an
extraordinary person? How wonderful it
would be for me to have a kesher with
this man.
Fast forward
40 years.
I'm standing in front of you today
because of that man.
Fast forward 40 years. I'm Z with the
nine children, seven of them married,
building their homes. I have a son of
Rashisha, a son of Rasho. I now have a
grandson it just started yeshiva
my beautiful amazing sister-in-laws are
building their dus at the same time how
did such a thing happen how are we to
such a thing
because one man
one giant of a man one living safeter
decided that I care about another Jew
one man,
one person who cared enough for a $150
to change one man's life
and with that person he gave this of
thousands and thousands of people to be
affected
a living satra.
How much a curse to save I have to this
sadic this godle not to green
I'd like to call up
um Davidid and his rabbitson
if you could just come up for one moment
please
deb
Come stand over here, please,
just for one moment. You're not in
trouble.
On behalf of Project Inspire,
on behalf of the
just wanted to have this to be able to
present to you on behalf of the
thousands of people, the tens of
thousands, probably the hundreds of
thousands of people your dear father and
father-in-law has affected.
It's a$150.
I just want to say thank you.
Just just two seconds. I just want to
say thank you, Rabbi Nissle, and
everything you've become is because of
who you are. And your father-in-law got
a $150. And some people would say,
great, I don't have to work today. I
made a $150. And someone wiser says, "It
must be that chabas is more important
than money." And that's the lesson he
took. And that's why he built a
beautiful family that you're part of.
I'm sure my father would be honored to
be here tonight and to celebrate the
fact that you're one of the son-in-laws
of the Browns and thank you very much on
his behalf. Thank you.
I was made way back in 1842
by a humble man, a real Godfearing Jew.
who did his work with honesty,
feeling and with pride.
He was known and ke
with loving care. his hand so
he formed me with some parchment he
can't quit
each day slowly at
just a few more lines
with words to last until the end of
town.
And on the day that I was finally
complete,
the whole town came and filled the
narrow street.
And they sang and danced and held me
high and carried me away
to the living wooden shoe where I would
stay.
And as the rabbi held me close against
his chair,
he spoke out loud and clear to hold the
rest.
He said, "No matter if you're very young
or even if you're old,
then by the words you'll find inside
this world.
So if you hear my voice,
you come along
and take me to the place where I belong.
and maybe even sing and dance when you
carry me away.
Some little wooden sure where I would
stay.
And as the rabbi holds me close against
his chest,
he'll speak out loud and clear to all
the rest.
They'll say, "No matter if you're bury
or even if you're old,
if by the words you find inside this
world."
Let's live by the words we'll find
inside our soul.
a good everyone.
My name is Schauman Brickman.
I live in far away after many years in
Flatbush and I dab Rabbi Brown sh
I consider myself a regular from Yid
nothing extraordinary
I'm not a practicing RV not a public
speaker
by day I'm an investment banker mergers
acquisitions negotiations numbers and a
big focus on raising a family on the
surface my life is very ordinary
But there's something that has always
been important to me. Over the years,
through business, travel, and everyday
life, I've met many fellow Jews who are
less affiliated, sitting across from me
in meetings, next to me on airplanes, in
casual conversations. Sometimes I felt a
quiet pull inside,
not to give a speech, not to preach,
just to ask a simple question. Would you
want to learn some Torah for a few
minutes each week?
I never knew that. I never knew what
would come from it.
Sometimes the answer was no. Sometimes
nothing happened.
But sometimes something beautiful began.
Barashem. Today I learn regularly with
four different kuses.
Jews I've met through completely
ordinary circumstances.
One of them I've been learning with for
with five days a week, every week for
the last eight years. Not hours, just
minutes, but constant minutes, real
connection.
Kira for me was never dramatic,
no grand programs, no just be just being
mindful enough to ask.
Then October 7th happened. Like everyone
here, I watched in shock and pain as the
events unfolded.
The months that followed were filled
with grief, but also with something
else, a hesus.
Jews everywhere began searching for
connection. People who hadn't put on
fillin in years suddenly wanted to.
Campaign started sitsus fillin mitzvah.
I participated like many others. I
donated. I sponsored. I supported. But
deep down I kept thinking,
what would it feel like not just to
sponsor Tillin, but to look another Jew
in the eye and ask him directly, do you
own a pier of fillain? And if not, would
you want one? not through an
organization, but personto person,
hearttoheart.
I didn't know if I'd ever have that
opportunity.
Then in March of this of last year,
project inspire brought a group a group
of us on a leadership territory to one
of the places we visited was the Nova
festival site.
Standing there was overwhelming. The
silence, the weight in the air, the
ground itself felt heavy with pain.
Hundreds of our brothers and sisters
murdered Alkidesh.
And guiding us through the site was a
man named Orurin Laer.
Orin wasn't a hostage. He wasn't even at
the festival. He lived nearby.
And when Orin heard what was happening,
when he realized Jews were being hunted,
he didn't hesitate. He got in his car
and drove toward the danger again and
again, back and forth, transporting Jews
to safety, risking his life, not once,
but repeatedly. And there he stood in
front of us, calm,
humble,
no fanfare, just telling his story like
it was an ordinary day. And as I stood
there listening,
I found myself thinking, here is a Jew
who risked his life for other Jews. He
saved bodies.
Could I help uplift an ashama?
And I wondered,
was this the moment to ask him,
Orin, do you havein?
October.
Apocalypt.
Foreign
speech. Foreign speech. Foreign speech.
for
leasch.
for
paramed.
It's about
foreign.
forch.
Foreign
speech. Foreign speech. Foreign speech.
for
Adam. Shello.
Foreign
speech. Foreign speech. Foreign speech.
fort.
Mr.
for
project inspire.
Um,
shalom.
forchech.
foreign.
My friend
Okay.
October.
Foreign
speech. Foreign speech. Foreign speech.
Thank you.
My name is Orin.
Studing here tonight after what you just
saw is very emotional for me.
On October 7, there was chaos, fear.
Jews running for their lives.
I didn't think
I just did what I had to do.
Jews were in danger and I acted.
That was saving Jews physically.
But months later
I learned something deeper.
Project inspire
come to the Israel.
They came to the Nova site a place of
pain and memory.
And there someone asked me a very simple
question.
Do you own a pear of feeling? And then
do you want a pair of filling?
No pressure.
Just Ken.
Shalom.
You are studying next to me tonight.
You asked me that question.
No one had ever asked me that before.
And I want to say thank you.
Since that day, I put on filling every
single day.
On October 7, I have saved Jewish lives.
That day at Nova, you carried about my
soul.
That is Jewish responsibility.
That is Jewish love.
I stand here not only because of what
happened on 7th of October, but because
a Jew carried for my Shama.
Thank you for caring about other Jews.
Thank you for caring about Jewish souls.
And thank you for letting my part of
this shab and I'm is
I have I have to say
>> I have to say that when we had that trip
you told us stories about who you saved
and the stories of people who are alive
today because of what you did.
You told a story about a boy who was
shot who was bleeding for nine hours. He
was bleeding out. Nobody can get to him
and you risked your life. And when I
told the story
to people who I know, they said,
"Really,
how could you have an event if you're
honoring Orurin and the work that he
did? How could you not have the boy who
you saved? And so Mayan, who you saved,
is here tonight. I want to ask Mayan
whose life he owes to you for saving him
on that day. Mayan, if you could please
come up.
Thank you.
My name is Mayan. Yes, I'm the one Orin
rescued with his with his own hands.
I'm standing here tonight only because
of him.
On October 7, I was in the Neville
Festival with my friends.
When the rockets and the shooting begun,
we ran to escape.
A terrorist group opened fire on our
car.
Two of my friends, Maya and Karina, were
killed next to me,
and I was hit with a bullet in my chest
for 9 hours.
not knowing if we would live or die.
We called the police and they wouldn't
come.
They said it's a war zone and it's too
dangerous.
We prayed for an 80 or army, but the
time passed by and just when it seemed
completely hopeless,
Orin came.
It felt unreal.
I was
I was battling to survive. And when Orin
came, it felt like hope.
It was a relief.
He carried me to his car,
looked at me and say, "Stay with me. you
will survive.
And because of him, I truly did.
Because of him, I'm alive.
Orin
You did not know me. You had no reason
to risk your life for me.
But you did.
You saved me and my friend.
You
You are the true definition of a hero.
because you mentioned you put the fill
in. I wanted to add a quote
and that's what you did to my world.
Orin,
you brought light not only to me
but to so many others.
It proved to me
that we are not strangers
at time of need.
We are one.
We are one family,
connected,
responsible for one another.
Thank you for saving my life.
when everyone else gave up on us.
Because of you, I'm standing here
tonight alive.
Thank you everyone.
And thank you all.
One more time.
We're praying for one more day.
The dance that will never end.
Together has one heart. Higher and
higher. One more song.
We pray for one more song.
The million from high above.
We'll sing and rejoice forever and ever.
I remember the sky Jerusalem warm.
Suddenly silence broken. A distant voice
and ancient pray. Children climbing
narrow stairs. Hearts were singing, lips
were praying.
Beneath us the ground will shake. How
can we dance? How can we sing? The
golden sky above us burning. We dream of
better days. We know the day will come.
We will dance again.
One more dance
we're praying for. One more dance.
A dance that will never end
together as one heart. Higher and
higher. One more song. Oh, we pray for
one more song.
The many from higher above
will sing and rejoice forever and ever.
Time has passed. The world's so
different. We saw angels lived with
miracles. We feel your presence in every
step. Return to us. We are ready now. We
dream of better days. We know the day
will come.
We will dance again.
One more dance
we're praying for. One more dance.
A dance that will never end.
Together has gone higher higher and
higher. One more song.
We're praying for one more song.
from high above.
We'll sing and rejoice forever and ever.
One more day. Oh, we pray for one more
day.
But that's now
together as one
high and higher.
Oh,
let's go a little bit. One more dance.
Light
it
down. Light it down. Ah. Ah. Ah.
Smack to be Yeah.
Yeah. Light to Yeah.
It's Yeah.
Yeah. Light to be a Yeah.
I
night.
I never
mind.
Aha. Aha. Aha.
To me. Yeah. Yeah. Gishmish
lighting light.
I
am high.
Give me a mic.